New People, Better and Improved!

Let me tell you what a trail family means. Vanilla, my hiking partner and pretty much best friend for life now, hiked the Appalachian Trail last year. He had physical and mental goals that he focused on more so than on building friendships with other like-minded hikers. He still made friends along the way, but he spent a lot of time alone. The time alone was beneficial to him, but he could have done with much less of it. This year, the people he meets along the way on the PCT are more important to him than the trail itself.

When Vanilla and I first set foot on the PCT, the two of us hiked and camped together. Less than a week into our hike, we crossed a campsite full of hikers setting up camp. He and I intended to continue hiking into the night that day, but we couldn’t find the trail in the dark. Being a guy, he insisted on reading maps, while I left him staring at his phone and approached a group of hikers huddled by a fire and asked them where to go.

That is where it all began. We stayed around the fire for a little while talking, then moved on, but the next time that we saw them, they were our people. I don’t know why, but we instantly clicked. We are from all walks of life, range from age 23 to mid-60s, have very different paces and goals and reasons and abilities, but we somehow formed a bond, and as a result, a family. We began to check in with each other, to take care of each other, to watch out for each other. We encouraged each other, we lifted each other’s spirits, we genuinely enjoyed each other’s company. It was beautiful.

(This is some of us, with a few extras.)

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For about a week, we hiked separately or in small groups, some of us taking no breaks and rushing ahead easily while others hiked slowly, took plenty of breaks, a crawled into camp hours later. Nevertheless, we all camped together, ate dinner together, and sat around the fire catching up until late into the night. It was so comforting at the end of the day to reunite and spend time with each other.

There were about a dozen of us. Now, there are two. Vanilla and I are hiking together again while the rest of the family has either scattered or is about 100 miles behind. When I got off the trail for four days to heal, most of them, for some reason, split apart and went their own ways. When I came back, the very first day, while eating at Paradise Cafe, I heard, “Free Spirit?” with disbelief in someone’s voice, and turned around to see three of my family members!

(My friend, Shane, AKA Cap-Cap, was with us since he was the one who dropped me back off on the trail and he is the non-hiker-trash-looking one in the photo.)

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We happily ate lunch together, then they went to Idyllwild to wait on a package (one of them needed a new backpack yet again; being too thin isn’t fun!) and see a dentist (one of them was having severe tooth pain). They stayed behind, and I continued on. Somehow, amidst more backpack issues and my now mostly-healed foot and, therefore, faster hiking pace, there ended up being a 100 mile gap between us. We will one day meet again, I’m sure, especially because I plan to take a few more relaxing days off in northern CA and Oregon, but right now, knowing that I had that wonderful week with them is enough.

Yes, it was only a week, but time out here is different. An hour is equivalent to a day, a day to a week, a week to a month, and a month to a year. And sometimes, even that is warped. A hiker told me how he hiked with another guy for eight days and felt like he’d known him for at least half a year. Last year, I hiked with RockStar for two weeks, and felt like I’d known him for two years. That is why friendships that form out here are so close and intimate by the end, why relationships that happen out here move so fast and feel like you’ve known the other person for forever, and people you’ve spent one day with can feel like best friends for life.

I think the reason this happens is because, out here, there is no hiding your worst. Back home, if you have a bad day, you can hole yourself up at home with Netflix. Here, if you have a day full of self-doubt or criticism, if you feel homesick and want to quit, if you’re battling negative memories and a storm of emotions, there is nowhere to go. There are hikers everywhere. If you sit down to cry, someone will see you and try to be there for you. If your usual chipper self is gone and you’re moody, your hiker friends will notice and ask what’s wrong. You can’t cancel and stay at home until you’re no longer in a mood. You go out there and face people with whatever you’re battling with written all across your face, and they see and know and accept you anyways, because they’ve got their own truths to face, and that is what builds these beautifully intimately bonded relationships between hikers better than out there amongst people in the normal world.

I have seen my trail family struggle and overcome, I have seen them grow and change and mature and get to know themselves, and I will continue to do so as we bump into each other from time to time. I’ve seen a handful of them since, and each person is so different since the last time I’ve seen them! Their appearance changes, as does their demeanor. Sometimes, their goals change, and their outlooks on life. By the end of this trip, we will all be new people! Better and improved! How exciting is that?!

By the way, the burgers at Paradise Cafe were amazing! Just had to put that out there. 🙂 Here’s proof!

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Little Update

Just a little update:

I am now in Hikertown. I am about 6 days behind schedule. I’m not worried. I am having an amazing time. My achilles hurts occasionally but nothing like before. People are awesome. I crave salty, spicy, lemony snacks. I’m often hungry but have actually gained weight due to muscle mass. I’m always sore. Uphills suck. Wifi does too. Blog posts are difficult to keep up with. Thanks for reading.

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This is Where I Belong

Ever since I got back on the trail two weeks ago, it feels like everything in the universe is aligning and nature is cooperating in order to show me that this is where I belong. I didn’t listen to the doctor’s orders to stay off of my foot for 8 weeks and I didn’t wait for my x-ray results because I knew I had to go back. I was being pulled back by something strong and unexplainable. My friend who drove me to my parents’ home to heal asked my mom how it felt to have me back. My mom said she never got me back. I was mentally back on the PCT all four days that I was home. I was daydreaming of being back nonstop, and now that I am, I couldn’t be happier.

The day I set foot on the PCT again on my own, after my friend who joined me in Big Bear left, and while my hiking partner was somewhere in town resupplying, my heart fluttered and my spirit soared. As I sat in the parking lot of a post office, cramming all of my newly awarded gear into my brand new backpack, a gentle breeze blew and white flower petals spiraled around me. I weighed my backpack at the post office, and it was the lightest its ever been. Everyone smiled at me as if they felt my joy themselves. I found a ride that brought me a little closer to the trail, began hiking, and was awestruck by beauty all around me. There was a cool breeze preventing me from overheating, trees everywhere, a view of water and boats to my left, and before the day was over, my hiking partner hitched a ride further up than where I began and caught up with me. There were shouts of joy and hugs that nearly toppled us over. We set up camp beside a stream that had aromatic sage growing all around it and slept beneath a canopy of trees.

Rain was predicted, but it never came. Likewise, snow was predicted when I began hiking that morning, but I beat it by a few hours. The hikers behind me had to walk through 6 inches of snow! The next day came, and it was also pleasant. I had hiked 11 miles the day before, and 11 the next. The following day, I attempted 14 miles, and did so with minimal pain. I hiked down the sweet-smelling trail with honeysuckle bushes surrounding me on both sides and felt like my injury was healing itself. But, of course I’d heal out here. The trail wanted me back. The universe was aligning in my favor and all of nature was cooperating with me. This is where I belong.

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Bacon for Breakfast?!


I haven’t yet shared with you the awesome story of my friend, Jessica, trail angeling for us during my first week of hiking. It must have been only day four on the trail, my journey had just begun, and Jessica contacted me and told me that she would like to bring oranges and beer for us to the Mt. Laguna campground. We told her beer’s a-plenty, so no need, but oranges sound great, and maybe some moleskin for our blisters too? She showed up late at night after work when we were all sleeping, slept in her car, and surprised us in the morning with oranges, moleskin, hot coffee, hot cider, root beer, cinnamon buns, Hawaiian rolls, bacon(!!!), dark chocolate bars, chips and salsa, firewood, and sooo many things that about 12 of us gobbled up in a heartbeat. She also took home 2lbs worth of junk that I decided to part with to lower my pack weight, drove two carfuls of my trail family to the restaurant and trailhead, and then hiked with me for the whole day.

All of this wonderful trail magic, and I got carried away with my hike and never even really thanked her. And the worst part, besides not thanking her enough, is that I nearly starved her! I was running a little low on food myself and had picked up a few meals from the hiker box (where hikers discard excess food, clothes, and other items) earlier. All I was thinking about was making it to the next town without running out of food and not messing up my achilles any further (it was pretty bad at that point; swollen and in a lot of pain). I didn’t even think about the fact that Jessica fed us most of her food in the morning and joined me for a short day hike with a granola bar and some leftover Hawaiian rolls in tow and one bottle of water. I didn’t notice that, when our simple day hike turned into a close to 10 mile hike, and that when she was waited around at the campground for a ride back to her car, she had no food or water. At one point, my subconscious reminded me for a second to be considerate, so I offered her something, but she remembered I was running low myself and adamantly shook her head in refusal.
Only when she had left and it felt so empty without her for a while did I start to replay the day’s adventures in my mind and remembered her snacking on nothing but a bread roll and her not having any water by the time we got to the campground. I felt like the worst friend ever. How could I be so inattentive? And the couple who drove her back to her car so she could go home, Just Wendell and Mama Bear, stocked me up with plenty of food when Mama Bear showed up and picked up her husband, Just Wendell, to take him off the trail because she wanted him back home. She shook out her husband’s backpack and gave me all of his extra food. I handed Jessica some of the surplus ritz crackers, and as she drove off, realized that was the only thing she’d had to eat in hours! I’m sorry for starving you, Jessica! I promise you that if we hike the JMT together (she wants to hike it for her birthday this year and I plan to get off the trail for a bit to join her), I won’t be so careless. You will be fed and your kindness and generosity will not go unrewarded. Thank you, dear friend. We have missed your presence and reminisced about your trail magic many times since!

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Acknowledging Amazing People

Just wanted to share for a moment how amazing some people and places are.


First off, this guy is pretty great. Remember him? My swing dance instructor? 😛

He dropped me off at the terminus, he picked me up when I got hurt and brought food and drinks for my trail family, he took me to my mama’s to heal, and then took me back to the trail where he hiked with me for two days. He learned how brutally cold it is to hike at nighttime without the proper attire (he had to put socks on his hands to regain feeling in them), he learned that tuna and hot sauce in a tortilla tastes pretty great after hours of hiking, and he learned how to drink stream water through a filter (and that it is so much better than bottled water!).

He encountered trail magic when we came upon a couch and a dumpster that used to be full of snacks we missed out on right in the middle of the trail (how the heck did someone even get it there?!).


We spent the night in the woods and hiked backwards the next day to see the same trail (and couch + dumpster) in the daytime.

And then we decided to reward ourselves with a hot tub, chocolate, coffee, and wine at an inn in Big Bear, and let me tell you about how awesome the place was!

It is a quaint little animal-themed inn (we stayed in the Bear room, but the rooms are all named after different animals) called Spanik’s Nature’s Inn (listen up if you’re behind me or share it with those who are) that is absolutely the best place I’ve stayed while traveling. Why? Because the hiker rate is $40 for a room, $50 for a room with a hot tub, and there’s also a $200 massive suite with a kitchen and backyard (where they’ll allow up to 6 people stay for $25 per person if over 3 people…because they know hikers are broke and like to share rooms). There is also a hiker room with a pool table, darts, books, board games, foot/back massages, epsom salt, bubble bath liquid, hot drinks, snacks, extra clothes to wear while doing laundry, a coin-operated laundromat block away, and about 10 huge hiker boxes. Contact info is in my itinerary if I’ve won you over. Also, I forgot my prescription sunglasses and Jerry, the manager, is mailing them for me to my next resupply stop. I mean, could their kindness and hospitality get any better? Thank you so much!

Also, Papa Smurf, a local trail angel, can take you to/from the trail.


I didn’t get to meet him, but he left a water cache in a location where I really needed water. I hitched a ride with this awesome lady halfway up the rutted dirt road (my eyes are closed but I told her I’d post a photo of us),


and then walked the rest of the 4 miles up Van Dussen, found the trail, and began hiking. Two miles in, I realized I had a liter of Gatorade water, and there was no water for 10.7 miles, and I didn’t know if I could make it that far tonight, and even if I did, it would take me all day…in the sun…with no water. I checked my map and saw there was a stream south on the trail on the other side of the road about two miles back. I headed back there, and about half a mile down, found Papa Smurf’s gallons of water. Thank you!

I’ve met so many good people out here, and I haven’t acknowledged/recognized all of them yet, but this is a start, I suppose. Once again, thank you everyone!

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Back on the PCT (North from Big Bear)

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I have been back on the trail for about a week, starting slow and getting back up there in miles, then slowing down again and resting for a full day. I tested my still tender achilles by cautiously hiking 5 miles each of the first two days, then 11 miles each of the following two days. I then tried a 14 mile day but that felt like a little too much for my foot (I also ran out of KT tape which I have learned is an amazing way of preventing an overextended tendon to continue to injure it itself every time I hike) so we took a day off. That day was a beautiful day full of eating Russian food and fresh berries, feeding baby goats, cuddling kittens and puppies and ducklings and many more interesting things. But that is a story for another blog post. This post is about leaving Big Bear on uncertain feet, not knowing how well they’ll fare and how far I’ll make it.

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So, I hiked through breathtaking Big Bear with a forecast predicting two feet of snow. All I saw was sunshine. The next day, the faster hikers who caught up with me told me that they hiked through snow and hail! Turns out I beat it by a few hours. And guess who else caught up with me? Vanilla! After about a week apart, my hiking partner and I reunited with shouts of joy and awkward bear hugs (try hugging with a big, bulky backpack on). We hiked together while it drizzled for a few hours and then camped together under grove of majestic oak trees that hid us from the rain at night. We briefly considering sleeping inside the cluster of trees themselves, as it looked so comfortable! 🙂

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Here is Vanilla showing you that it is possible…if you’re 5’4″. I have to mention the fact that we had an argument about his height, since he insisted he was 5’7″, but I’m 5’5″ and about an inch taller, so therefore, he couldn’t possibly be the height he thinks he is, and I have now shattered his delusion of grandeur. Haha!

But he has also witnessed me learn a thing or two, such as the fact that a 50cent emergency poncho looks like a yellow garbage bag and doesn’t substitute for a rain jacket (and yes, that is an actual garbage bag over my backpack since I don’t have a rain cover for my backpack).

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We had a good laugh over my hilarious appearance and considered writing “hiker trash” in sharpie across the front of the trash bag–a term that hikers use to accurately describe a hikers appearance and behavior, especially in comparison to locals when we visit towns; the first time you show up in town wearing smelly, stained, sweaty, salt-crusted clothes with knots and leaves in your hair, you don’t know where to hide, but the initial embarrassment soon fades when you realize you’re not the only one and there are plenty of hikers who look and smell much worse.

What else did I do? I celebrated hiking 300 miles with a smiling photo of a beautiful place near the spot my GPS told me was the 300 mile marker.

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Here is also one of me, much earlier, posing by the 100 mile marker someone made (unfortunately there was none for 200 or 300, so I had to make do with a sharpie and my hand). 100 miles was a huge milestone for many. At that point, we were all still adjusting, our bodies felt broken, and the ones who realized long-distance backpacking was not for them had started to disappear from the herd little by little. Making it 100 miles felt like a big accomplishment, a confirmation that we were all actually on this long trek that consisted of many miles, and a reminder of how many more miles we had to go (approximately 2,550!).

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I also drank some of the freshest stream water (with a waterfall filling up my bottle faster than any faucet).

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I crossed a rainbow bridge with two Native American guys in traditional attire that I hiked with for a while.

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And so much more that I’ll share with you later. Way too much is happening way too fast and I can’t keep up! But I am loving every minute of it and I wouldn’t want to be anywhere else right now than back on the PCT.

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Becoming “Free Spirit”

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It is time for a long overdue introduction.

Hello! Nice to meet you. I am “Free Spirit.”

This is what I’m known as on the trail, this is what my trail family calls me, this is what my hiking partner named me on day three of hiking, this is what I identify with, this is my name for the next 6 months.

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In case you’re not familiar with “trail names,” how it works is when you escape from the real world and create a completely new lifestyle and transform into a whole new person on the trail, you no longer identify with your old self and so your old name becomes irrelevant. Therefore, a fellow hiker is given the honor of giving you a “nickname” which is actually a pretty big deal because this will be how you introduce yourself, how you sign the trail register, and what you are known as for the entire duration of your hike.

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You can be given a trail name on the first day, or the third month, or somewhere near the end. There really are no rules, except that you should not give yourself a name, but let others do it for you. And when someone else gives you a trail name, it can be for any number of fun reasons.

Last year, I met a hiker named RockStar. He was dubbed RockStar because when he was relaxing in a naturally hot spring with fellow hikers, a local who often frequented that spring looked around at the fit, young men in the water, and asked, “Hey boys, why don’t you take your shorts off?” Mind you, this local was not a beautiful naked woman, but a nude, elderly, overweight man, and therefore, this request was not received well. The boys mumbled, “No, it’s okay,” or something along those lines, and the man fell silent for a minute or two. Then, again, “So, boys, I have an idea. Why don’t you get those shorts off?” The men insisted, “Nah, we’re going to keep our shorts on.” A few minutes later, again, “Hey, so, why don’t we all take those shorts off?” RockStar, who was not yet known as RockStar, turned around and looked directly at the man, and said, “Sir, let’s get this straight. These shorts right here are not coming off, okay?” And the chubby naked man thought about it for a while, and then said, “Oh! I get it! You must be a rock star! A lot of rock stars come to this area to bathe in the hot springs and don’t want to be recognized. I completely understand,” as if that made any sense at all. Rock stars can be recognized based on the appearance of their genitals? Anyway, all of the hikers in the hot water called their friend RockStar ever since then.

You can be given a trail name for various other reasons, such as based on where you’re from (“Philly”), how you look (“Smiley” or “Mad Dog” or “Dirty Kid”), how you walk (“Roadblocker” or “Tailgater”), how you dress (“Fancy Pants”), what you do (“Munchies” or “The Giver”), and the list goes on and on. These are all actual people I’ve met hiking the PCT, and yes, they are known by their nickname for the duration of the time they’re hiking, and often, even afterwards.

When I hiked for a month last year, I was known as Mermaid (I had purple scaly leggings on when I began my hike). I planned to continue as Mermaid this year, but was soon renamed Free Spirit (I began my hike with a shirt my mom gave me with the words “Free Spirit” on it). I also wore a flower headband that was supposed to be a hat band but didn’t stay on my hat for very long, and I brought along my free-spirited personality. Everyone instantly said that “Free Spirit” fit me really well and that I should go by it, and it actually was pretty difficult to mentally shift gears and decide to go by a different name. I felt like I was going through an identity crisis! Haha. But after enough people called me “Free Spirit,” I realized that I liked it, I identified with it more, it did fit me pretty well, and so I let go of “Mermaid” and became “Free Spirit.”

Now that I’m no longer Mermaid, my pack’s name doesn’t really make sense… Last year, my pack was Ursula, this year I call him Leviathan on good days (he is monstrous) and Leech on bad days (he does feel like a parasite latched on to me after 10 hours of hiking). But now that I have a new pack to replace my old one with, I guess a new name is warranted, possibly one that goes along with “Free Spirit.”

This may seem silly to you, but this is what trail life does to you. Don’t ask me what I named my feet! 😉

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Grand Prize Winner!

This year, when I decided to thru-hike the PCT, I mostly borrowed gear or obtained hand-me-downs, and some of it didn’t fit me well, caused me pain, was too heavy, didn’t work as well as it should, etc. I knew I had to go out there this year instead of waiting for next year when maybe I could acquire better gear, so I thought I’d make do with what I had as best as I could.

A week before my start date, I entered a raffle that was part of a charity fundraiser hosted by GearRat Outdoors, a backpacking gear swap page on Facebook. I never win anything, and I’m surprised I even chose to enter this raffle, so I was obviously incredibly taken aback to find out that, a week into my hike, I was announced as the grand prize winner and would be equipped with all brand new gear–some of the best, most ultralight, gear there is–and it’s 100% free for me to keep.

I made a video of my reaction and my gratitude when I first found out. You can see it here: https://youtu.be/aQ0MwLAXylg

After it was mailed out to me, the organizer of the event asked me to make a video of me opening the box and revealing its contents. Here is that video: https://youtu.be/ZxTlt9OyLPM

And here is a photo of everything that I won!

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I opted out of taking the sleeping bag as it was a men’s long, and besides, I already have one that (I hope) will serve me well.

Isn’t this the most amazing thing ever?! I’m the luckiest girl in the world.

 

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Off the Trail – My Wilderness Home Awaits!

[Written a few days ago:]

I’ve been off the trail for 4 days, and it’s been driving me insane, but it’s also been wonderful. Staying with my loving mama was the best thing ever. I’ve been fed soup and sandwiches and fresh salads nonstop, had cooling cream rubbed into my swollen tendons and wrapped KT tape all over my ankles (we did it wrong, I know, but it prevents me from bending my foot too much which lessens the pain), and honestly, I’ve just been spoiled rotten.

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I mean, seriously… look at this. This is me soaking in the tub and my mom knocks on the door and asks if she can bring me something and hands me a sandwich. I’m the luckiest PCT hiker ever to have a mother like mine taking care of me when I’m hurting. 🙂

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But….I’m going to give all this selfish pampering up and get back out there tonight! I’ll be taking it slow and going from Mountain Center to Big Bear these next few days ( and yes, I am aware of the fire closures and will be avoiding certain parts of the trail).

My injured foot is healing slowly. It feels a little better than it did a few days ago. Some days, I can walk fine, with hardly any limping or pain. Other days (and especially nights) are really bad. But I’m feeling stronger, and I believe I can go out there and continue hiking slowly and be aware of what my body allows me and listen to it. I can’t let this stop me!

I am taking supplements to aid my body in the recovery process: magnesium, calcium, vitamin D, E, and collagen. Additionally, I’m going to try taking protein powder and see if it aids in making me feel stronger and healthier. And now that I know what KT tape is, I will be bringing it with me and actually reading the instructions and putting it on right so that I don’t look like this, haha.

I understand what I did wrong. I was too excited, too eager, too impatient, and I didn’t let my body slowly adjust to the process of hiking for 10 hours a day. I donned an overly heavy pack, wore cheap shoes that gave my ankle and achilles zero protection, and ran up and down inclines and declines. And by “ran,” I actually mean just that. I like running on the trail, and that can be a great workout, but I shouldn’t have done so on day one. I should have built up to that level, not started with it. Lesson learned. Lesson really learned. Now, please, dear feet, let me do my thing!

My wilderness home awaits!

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Walking & Talking: Windy Desert, Hunger, Injuries

Hi All!

I haven’t been blogging much lately, and I find it extremely difficult to do so with no cell service in the middle of the desert, but in my absence, I made you all a video of me hiking and talking about random things–the weather, my injury, the lack of water, hunger, my trail family, and what hiking the PCT is like. The video consists of multiple clips filmed all throughout the day, hours apart, and you can see how much windier it gets with each video until it’s nearly blowing me over! Haha. You also see me begin to limp more and more and begin to make plans to get off the trail for a few days to heal, which I actually ended up having to do.

Anyways, enjoy. Sorry it’s so long! Apparently, I like to talk a lot when I’m filming myself in the middle of nowhere.

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Click Here To Watch My Video on Youtube

 

 

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